Bangkok Post

HK media arrests ‘lawful’

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SHANGHAI: The police raid on Hong Kong media organisati­on Stand News this week was “completely lawful and beyond reproach”, said a spokesman with the Chinese embassy in Britain, hitting back at foreign criticism of the move.

The embassy spokesman was responding to comments by Amanda Milling, British minister of state for Asia, who said on Twitter that the actions “further erode freedom of speech in Hong Kong”.

“The rights and interests of Hong Kong residents, including freedom of speech and freedom of the press, are safeguarde­d in accordance with the law,” China’s embassy said late on Thursday.

“The Chinese side once again urges the UK to right its wrongs and stop interferin­g in any form in Hong Kong affairs, which are China’s internal affairs,” the spokesman added.

Two former senior editors of Stand News were charged with conspiring to publish seditious materials and denied bail by a court on Thursday, a day after a police raid on the pro-democracy media organisati­on that prompted its closure.

About 200 officers raided the online publicatio­n’s office, froze its assets and arrested seven current and former senior editors and former board members on Wednesday.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken accused China and Hong Kong of silencing independen­t media and called on authoritie­s to immediatel­y release the arrested Stand News staff.

But the Communist Party’s People’s Daily, said in an editorial yesterday that “freedom of the press” was being used as an excuse to sow “anti-China chaos” in Hong Kong. It accused foreign politician­s of “recklessly discrediti­ng” Hong Kong police.

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